A system of elocution, with special reference to gesture, to the treatment of stammering, and defective articulation .. . 185 Tolls Address to the Mountains Knowles 203 Thanatopsis Bryant 241 The American Flag Drake <$? Hallcck 328 The Burial of Sir John Moore Wolfe 281 The Chameleon Merrick 275 The Exile of Erin Campbell 280 The Destruction of Senacherib Byron 335 The Grave of Franklin Miss C. H. Waterman 305 The Heavens and the Earth show the Glory and Wisdom of their Creator Goldsmith 282 The Hermit Beattie 220 The Importance of Order in the Distribution of our Time Blair 331 The Invocat
A system of elocution, with special reference to gesture, to the treatment of stammering, and defective articulation .. . 185 Tolls Address to the Mountains Knowles 203 Thanatopsis Bryant 241 The American Flag Drake <$? Hallcck 328 The Burial of Sir John Moore Wolfe 281 The Chameleon Merrick 275 The Exile of Erin Campbell 280 The Destruction of Senacherib Byron 335 The Grave of Franklin Miss C. H. Waterman 305 The Heavens and the Earth show the Glory and Wisdom of their Creator Goldsmith 282 The Hermit Beattie 220 The Importance of Order in the Distribution of our Time Blair 331 The Invocation Mrs. Hemans 278 The Journey of a Day Dr. Johnson 311 The Land that we Live in C. W. Thomson 31G The Mariners Dream Dimond 265 The Miser and Plutus Gay 138 The Miser and Plutus, with Gestures 192 The Rose Cowper 181 The Three Warnings Mrs. Thrale 272 The Union of the States Webster 345 Time Van Yranken 327 To the Ursa Major Ware 200 Without God inthe World Rev. Robert Hall 270 Wolseys Farewell to Cromwell Shakspeare 318 Wolseys Soliloquy Shakspeare 317 Woman R. II. Townsend 255 Woman Campbell 342 A N is designed for action. Na-ture has so constituted him, thatboth body and mind requiredaily exercise to develope theirpowers, and maintain them in avigorous and healthy The truth of this remark is manifest from constant observation and experience — thosewho lead active, bustling lives, conjoined with temperanceand prudence, commonly possess robust frames, and healthyconstitutions; while the sedentary and the indolent areenervated and sickly. We find the same results from the exercise of the mentalfaculties. He whose mind is constantly employed in theacquisition of knowledge, usually retains his mental facul-ties unimpaired to the last. But not so with the man of easeand indolence. After the meridian of life, the powers of hismind, with those of the body, become weaker, and weaker,and he finally leaves the world as he entered it — a child. The heal
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjectgesture, booksubjects